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English Restoration Theatre

English Restoration Theatre. 1660-1700. Historical Background. Charles I was removed from throne and beheaded by Oliver Cromwell and the Puritans in 1649 after a 7 year civil war Next 11 years known as the commonwealth Cromwell died in 1658 and his son could not control government

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English Restoration Theatre

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  1. English Restoration Theatre 1660-1700

  2. Historical Background • Charles I was removed from throne and beheaded by Oliver Cromwell and the Puritans in 1649 after a 7 year civil war • Next 11 years known as the commonwealth • Cromwell died in 1658 and his son could not control government • In 1660, Charles II, who had been living in France, was invited by a newly elected Parliament to return from exile and rule England • Monarchy was restored and the new period was called the Restoration. • Rulers that followed: • James II (1685) • William and Mary (1688)

  3. Theatre During the Commonwealth • Puritans closed theatres in 1642 • Playhouses were dismantled • Actors were persecuted • Around 1650, William Beeston acquired the Salisbury Court Theatre and began to train a company of boys • Performed drolls – short versions of full-length plays, usually comedies

  4. William Davenant • Court playwright before the closing of the theatres • Presented theatre as “musical entertainments” and staged them in his home • In 1656, he presented The First Day’s Entertainment at Rutland House and The Siege of Rhodes • The Siege of Rhodes had a proscenium arch and wing-shutter settings • Influences of Italian scenic designs incorporated – first public performance with changeable scenery was used • Considered the first English opera • First public performance in which actresses appeared on stage

  5. Restoration Drama • Unique fusion between Elizabethan stage conventions and Italian and French styles • French culture was especially influential in Restoration society • Charles II had spent his exile in France • James II had ties with Catholic Europe • Serious Drama • Heroic Tragedy • Dealt with extraordinary characters who undertook extraordinary deeds and had themes of love and honor • Restoration Tragedy • Adherence to Neoclassic Rules • Popular to rework Shakespeare into Neoclassical mold • Romeo and Juliet with a happy ending • King Lear with Lear restored to his throne and Cordelia does not die

  6. Comedies of Intrigue • Daring exploits of romance and adventure with complicated plots • Aphra Behn • First woman English playwright • Plays followed the trend of being bawdy • “It was bawdy, the least and most excusable fault in the men writers, to whose plays they all crowd, as if they came to no other end than to hear what they condemn in this, but from a woman it was unnatural.” – Aphra Behn • John Dryden spoke of her as “writing loosely, and giving, … some scandal to the modest of her sex. I confess, I am the last man who ought, in justice, to arraign her, who have been myself too much a libertine in most of my poems.” • Plays include: The Forced Marriage (1677), The Rover (1677), The Amorous Prince! (1671), The Emperor of the Moon (1687)

  7. Comedies of Manners • Focuses on the fashions and foibles of the upper class – gossip, adultery, sexual escapades • Poke fun at the social conventions and norms of the time and satirize the preoccupation of the upper class • Language consists of witty exchanges and sexually suggestive references • Influenced by Molière • Characters are stock types – their names usually describe their distinctive personality traits • Doctor Quack, Pinchwife, Horner, Fidget, Squeamish, • William Wycherley • Most famous play: The Country Wife (1675) • In the play a man attempts to keep his wife away from the amorous advances of Horner, who specializes in seducing other men’s wives

  8. The Female Wits • Group of women writers who worked to increase the involvement of female playwrights in English theatre, building on Aphra Behn’s work • Catharine Trotter • Mary Pix • Delariviere Manley

  9. Restoration Audiences • Audiences were quite spirited in their behavior during performances • Spoke back to the actors, arranged assignations with each other and attended the theatre to be seen rather than to see the play • Primarily audiences of the upper class – the same group being satirized in the plays • Playwrights tailor their works specifically for the audience they know will be watching

  10. Performers • Thomas Betterton • Admired for his attention to detail, self-discipline and majestic restraint, he remained a model of English oratorical style • Noted for his dazzling characterizations of Shakespeare’s tragic heroes, even though he was equally skillful in comedy and tragedy • Appearance of actresses on the English stage • Popular dramatic device to dress woman as a man – called breeches roles • Considered by religious leaders to be scandalous • Actresses often seen as no better than prostitutes • Not necessarily a sign of equality or equal treatment by allowing women to perform • Eleanor (Nell) Gwynn • Famous actress – excelled in singing and dancing but was a failure in tragedy • Drew attention of Charles II and became his mistress and left the stage

  11. Acting Companies • Actors were hired on a contract system and not a sharing plan • Marked a decline of actors’ control over theatre in London • Actors were provided with yearly “benefits” where one actor would keep all the profits of a performance • Actors learned their craft through apprenticeships • Rehearsals lasted less than 2 weeks • Acting styles featured broad gestures and powerful declamatory delivery • Actors fell back on conventional patterns of stage movement

  12. Government and the Theatres • Master of Revels took control of theatre and issued licenses • In 1737, Parliament passed the Licensing Act • Only two theatres were authorized to present “tragedy, comedy, opera, play, farce, or other entertainment for the stage for gain, hire or reward” • Covent Garden and Drury Lane theatres were the two theatres authorized

  13. Theatre Architecture • All theatres were now indoor proscenium-arch buildings • Audience areas divided into pit with backless benches and raked from back to front, boxes, and galleries • Stage divided into two distinct halves • The Apron – the forestage in front of the proscenium – major area for performance • Backstage housed the scenery • Entire stage was raked • Proscenium doors • Used for entrances and exits

  14. Scenic Practices • Sets painted in perspective • Flats on groove system • Stock settings were normal: drawing room and the park • Scene changes happened while audience watched • Costumes followed traditions of English Renaissance • Contemporary clothing was standard • Traditional costumes and accessories worn to indicate historical figures or eras • Lighting was difficult • Performances took place in the afternoon to use natural lighting • Candles and chandeliers were used to light as well • Used footlights – lights on the floor running along the front of the stage

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